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ffCh* Only Big Circus Com // SPARKS' CIRCUS A THO m . "Jho Sparks Circus gave a ti t one, just the kind we wjere glad J Morning Star, Wilmington, N. C. If ' CIRCUl " // f\l I OWIU If Under i H ADULTS 75c (inc I< WEB 8 MmaSTSWSnrwir IP 3 Rl rciR< I PRESENTING ON ON i PROGRAM AND FO 1 IN ALL CIBn k NOT MANY, B ^kWORLD'SG / Will Exhibit At >UNION TOMORROW 2?Performances?2 S?-v--T K U R SD A1 OCTOBER STREET PARADE 10:30 A, A _ N ^ To Our Si / v Mr. Roy Vaughan, collector for The Time friends to drop in and tion. We have not at in the field, and will ap in and renewing you fall of the year is her< tions are expiring this ' give us your renewal i for renewal. k ? ? ? ? 4 y ' . ' ,1. % The Unit . I LEWIS > i ????-?? Trying as it is for a girl to discover that her idol has feet of clay, it is worse for her to find that he has a head of bone.?Boston Transcript. ing to Union This Year! ROUGHLY CLEAN ONE ne show, and a thoroughly clean to have our children witness."? prices: l?reai oaa Xgo of 12 WVt luditig war tux). mi ing-w ^ :us 1 E STUPENDOUS I R THE FIRST TIME M JS HISTORY M UT ALL THE A REATCSr^U R3T57|I| r>BHI> | Jm W I I ^k f. '> <M| f VVHHHBhHB ubscribers # =r?s^s5sssygasa^a^:issS , having resigned as is. we hear in urare nni* ( -1 "? ? ?ft" renew their subscrippresent any coUector predate your coming ir subscription. The t and many subscrip- i i month. Call in and or mail us your check 4 >* >v / 'i s I f % ' in Tim no HI IllllOd M. RICE, Editor. "It's* our duty," mid Uncle Ebec "to love our fellow men. But In ord? to do so you's got to be terrible for givin/ ** ' s ' * . . . V >1a -J 3?rFfrSfecAl I Execution* and Reconstruction Mark Russian Polio Riga, Oct. 7.?The cracking of th< j lifles of.squads of executioners con tinucs throughout Russia, and may h; heard simultaneously with the tatto( of workmen's hammers engaged u the actual repair and reconstruction of buildings throughout the land. That reconstruction has begun and is slowly continuing without impoit. i ant assistance from foreign countries and that the Soviet has not changed , its unrelenting and ruthless policy toward it? political foes, are two outstanding phases of the Russian situation evident to the correspondent of 7 he Associated Press who has conic i to Riga after an eight months' stay in 1 Russia. ! Hardly a day passes but somewheiv | in the country the death sentence fci political offenses is made effective j but qt the same time no day dawns ! \v ithout the beginning of some new i t.isk, the purpose of which is to put .. 1 V.-SU! - ? i in urucr uuucnngs nnu sweets that I were wrecked during the revolution, Prisoners doomed to die look from Iheir windows out on bustling street scene* and smiling people who haw forgotten politics in the pleasure of building new fortunes as trade opens up. There have been no changes in tne fundamental policies of the Soviet government, but its tactics now seem to be strikingly summed up in the phrase of a foreign observer at Moscow: "Assist or wink at anything which ultimately helps us in the reconstruction of Russia; relentlessly crush anyone who dares to raise ian hand against us politically." Speculators flourish, but the go.'j c i nment is busy devising means to | get their money away from the n These men pay heavy taxes; dine at j stupendous prices in tax-burdened resj taurants, and play baccarat for high r takes at night in the caslnoes from | which the government takes the lion's s-hare of the profits. To the specn la tors the government is like the God. of Olympus, permitting Its children to play lit business, but thieatonin?.. them with a thunderbolt if they dan to take part in the political game. The government makes no secret ?W its dictatorship, and the people :av I ncoming accustomed to this and v.< r > i happy in their daily lives under it. Under the iron hand of dictatorf I- ..Viaf AKAA ? ' " - ? ? - ? - ou*j/ vnv vAiowutc ui nit" maaM'5 wi Russia is beginning to run smootnly, While the correspondent was in Mo 31 cow he was assured by government; lenders that no political freedom would be granted Russia. But this seems not to worry the people, and tired of war and strife, they now ae ample food before them, coupled with the possibilities of personal advance ment. Throughout Soviet Russia there >.not today, nor has there been for -months ^ a single- Important uprising. The Communist control is tighter and more complete than ever. The Committee of Investigation is ou twee tiling, trying and convicting various minor officials who accepted bribes, and is thus endeavoring to build up a bureaucratic machine which will operaU I strictly in accordance with ordeii from the Central government. Th old Cheka has been abolished, end in its stead there has come up the organization known as the Political Police. The latter does not interfere j in men's private lives, but in politics ; they are as omnipotent as ever. At one time the political police could shoot people first and try them afterward. Today the method is to have a court trial first and then carry ou1 the execution, or to send suspects into exile withot trial. To foreigneurs in Rssia the 'eaders rnuke no effort to conceal their policy. They are, not ashamed. They hav? confidence in the policy of doine Boils Quit Quick! | S.S. S. Will Prowe to Yoa fa Yens Own Case the "How" and "Why" of its Remarkable Blood-Cleansing Power! There Is a reason for srerrthinc that happens. Coinuion-senae kills misery. Common-sense also stops bolls! 8. 8. 8. Is the common-Beuse remedy for bolls, be Ptmplos Mar be Snail Bells! cans* It la built on reason. Bcientidc authorities admit Its power 1 8. 8. Rebuilds blood-power, It builds rsd-blood-cells. That Is what makea tig htlng-blood. <?Ft|feb Ina-blood destroys Impurities. Ib fights bolls. It always wins! It fight* pimples! It fights Skis esuptlonsl It; builds nerve-power, thinking power, thei tightlisted power that whirls a man ap nttt success. It gives women the health, the angelic complexion and the charsa that moves the world 1 These are the seasons that have made 8. 8. 8. today th# great blood-cleanser, body-builder, success bidder, end It's why results have made tears of Jo* flow from the souls of thousands' Mr. V. D. Bcbnff, 597 15th 8t., Washington, D. C., writes: "/ triod for years to got roliof from s had esse of hoOs. Everything failod until I tool 8. 8. 8. I em now abootutolg tmrod, mnd 11 was 8. 8. 8. that did UT Try it yoursslf. 8. 8. 8. Is sold at all > drug stores in two sites. The larger slat bottle la 18* move economical. ^ [ > SLS#S? BS^mSFJgrih S. 8. 8. is boM by Union Drug Stan 1 # 1, W'^?" 1 ' Hi .? 1 ' .' \f S '. I I ^ I YY ^, 'I it || ! t? ? ? $5; wsm I * ? *^f<^^r*S+4t+++S4#+S+S+4 ; L?^ ( i?p wrong: that Rood u^imaffely may C-, .c, I 1 and they apparently ate succeeding, slowly and painfully, in reconstructing Russia, but along their own lines, and without any important sacrifice of principle. M l: | The evidence of reconstruction in 1 , the land is more superficial than really 1 | deep-seated. Streets are being re- ^ ' paved, buildings reconstructed, and * railroad passenger traffic Is neoniing r I normal. Industrial plants, ?iowe\tr, c it in no worse condition than ?i voar ^ f go, certainly are in no better shape. I hese plants need foreign capital, but | lacking this on terms to which the Communists can consent, the government is ready to wait until it has a surplus of exports from agriculture. | This it hopes for in 1923, and then | and thereafter it sees money with ' which it will be able to establish industries itself. In the meantime, with evidence at hand of enough food to feed practically the entire population; with a fuel supply exceeding that of last year and with textile works producing a considerable amount of i clothing, the government expects the population to be fed, and warmed, and clad, not nec essarily very well, but still well enough to weather another year without foreign loans. To feed the few hundred thousands of people who still suffer from the Russian famine, the government still looks to foreign aid. This will pedmit it to devote most of the available ] ramine and church treasure funds to constructive agricultural betterment, and to the purchase of harvesting mo chinery, horses, etc. . Nikolai Lenine, premier of Russia, though far from strong as the. result of his recent illness, hanbeen the buiding mind in these general policies. Notice of Sale of Tenant Houses Notice is hereby given that the trustees of Union Graded Schools 1 will sell to the highest bidder for cash, October 10, 1922, at 11 ^o'clock 1 a. m., on the grounds, four or five > tenant houses now on the Clifford . property recently purchased by said i trustees and situated northeast of ' the new arhiwil hnilrffns ??? erected.". Only the buildings to be i sold, not the lend, and purchaser or t purchasers will be required to move i said buildings off the lot on or by 1 I November let, next. | 'Terms of sake*. Cash. I , By order ei the -board. 1 C. T. Murphy, Chairman. i Sept, 20-27 Oet. 4-11. - *U..? .. J 1 | I". -5-J..M1LJB1W1! < . . Ninety per cent of all the motion ( picture Alms shown, in Australia are . ? United States productions. Wk Mml nnw>T uvn i OUR |fik ALUMiNI i? THUF W m W 9 A See Our Any Artie l^||v Worth $2.( ilk C0ME PRC aengk you ? disapp if]/ THE I jW HARDW, u A Dmu A m lkf\l\U TTftllJ Union, T^Sl^Mp*^jfespjE SriiL Jkraine Expects Normal Grain Crop in 1923 Khurkov, Oct. 10.?Poverty and1' ilonty today run hand in hand alon^ he railroads in the Ukraine, a eoun- ' :rv once known ?? th?? <rp?inarw ,?r Surope. Therfc? are bulging ware louses of grain at some stations, 1 lone at all at others, while beggars ' esiege the passenger trains at every ! ullage. The Ukraine this year as last can- J lot produce enough food for its own I leople. The grain crops for 1922 are , >nly about GO percent of normal, and j Soviet officials frankly admit that rntside aid from relief organizations J s necessary until next spring at! east, especially among the children n the villages. The peasants, say -he officials are quite able to take :a:e of themselves, excepting in the icattered districts where there was i crop failure due to drouth or lack >f seeds last season. There are splendid crops this year n a few districts in the northern >art of the Ukraine?equally as good is in normal times. But in the south *reat stretches of land were effect>d by hot weather and there is not learly enough bread stuffs to go iround. Ukrainian officials say that vith the aid of the central Soviet government they are making arrangements to transport 4,000,000 poods of grain from the north to ;hu south. From districts where food lias >ccn scarce even in summer, people lave been flocking to the towns. As i result there are as many beggars n the larger places as last year, vhen there was a crop failure. Some >f the beggars are almost plump, while others are as thin as can be. ley resemble the pictures of hungry natives of India, and appear barey able to move about. In the poorer listricts the village dogs, too, have >ecome beggars, like the dogs of Inlia?gaunt, mangy creatures that >at ravenously even the cantelQupe ind apple peelings thrown from the :ar windows. In addition to its fair grain crop n the North this season, the Ukraine las produced als^ about 13,000,000 joods of beet sugar, three times more Knn In of onaunn Knf Karnlu uv* 'or the 30,000,000 inhabitants of the Ukraine Soviet republic itself. Ukrainian officials say they have plenty of potatoes this year, and that from present indications of the fall slanting there are prospects of nearly a normal grain crop for 1923. rht?, they believe, would put the :ountry on its feet again. Advertise in The Thma Bfeb< sM j^^st ^IBL/teil?ISI&i II yiS&^$$l 'Bill II 0^W M|i, FORGET GREAT J00m^DM SALE Jm SSDAY fP?! NING IS ?M. Window, le For 90c )0 And Up. >MPTLY OR M0 ifllX BE Jg|? 'OINTED ' |ipr union are co. \*f e leaders ^~~t s. . lislk jsim f tfr 1*1 ) ) 1*1 ^ 1*1 t*t ^ ^ ^ t* "POL fwm I U1 VII I ALL THOSE WHO I POTATOES FOR TH I REQUESTED TO CA j WE FIND THAT IT W1 I TO DISPOSE OF T 1 CANNED. WE HAVE I TO GET THE $3,500 9 BUILD A DRYING HI I WE ARE. IT HAS C( | THE CROP IS EXCEE1 I THIS COUNTY, AND ? WILL, AFTER THE F1 I BE GOOD. THIS GIVI 5 WILL YOU CALL ANE I WE MAY TALK IT 0^ I THE UNION < I PRODUC I LEWIS M. Land Reclamation in a If ml V PwAWIMH ? C ..1 II Rome, Oct. 10.?Pursuing a policy j. of land reclamation the government, working with private associations, has o brought uifder cultivation 500,000 acres of land which otherwise would f be virtually worthless. ^ In the Ferrara and Modena districts a drainage basin coverover of 4 200,000 acres has been completed, and 150,000 miles of ditches have been I built. This work has cost already 80,000,000 lire, and further drainage V - ** ? 1 S. k *v* j j 111 ||l i > ! I nil llB^ ! ! If o.nayfl ; ; TSMBl ?? if ?? 1tigH] YY yy TT TI ; * ^ YY IllgfMlIk : II ^ <i> $M0r ft II <|? ?fr ^ *^4* <$ <$? ifF *? irers PLANTED SWEET E CANNERY ARE [I AKin err uc i LtLi nilLT JLtL UJ. I LL BE IMPOSSIBLE HE CROP WHEN NEVER BEEN ABLE OF CAPITAL TO )USE. SO, THERE )ME ABOUT THAT | DINGLY SHORT IN HENCE THE PRICE IRST FEW WEEKS, iS US A WAY OUT. > SEE US, SO THAT /ER? CANNING & rs co. RICE, President. nd irrigation project* will cost as iuch again. In the Polesine-San Girogio disrict 125,000 acres of swampy malaious land has been converted into ome of the most fertile grain fields f Italy. CORE THROAT J Gargle with warm salt water ?torn apply ovar throat? VICKS w VAPORul Ont 17 MllUon Jan UooiYom*